On Jan. 29 and 30, 2013, a winter-time tornado outbreak produced multiple tornadoes from the southern Plains states, across the Mississippi River Valley, eastward to the Mid-Atlantic. On Feb. 10, several tornadoes touched down in Mississippi, destroying 200 homes, damaging and causing injuries near Hattiesburg.
"These storms can spin up pretty quickly which limits warning lead-time," said NOAA scientist Steve Goodman. "The radar and storm spotter’s view of tornadoes reaching the ground can be blocked by terrain, or visibility is very poor when the tornado is wrapped in rain. And it's certainly more challenging for storm spotters to observe and confirm tornadoes occurring at night. Sometimes it's just plain hard to come up with enough advance warning."
For the first time, scientists will be able to detect the lightning occurring inside storm clouds, and thus better track how developing storms are moving and intensifying before and during the occurrence of severe weather, Goodman said, all of which will help meteorologists better predict weather disasters...
A powerful cold front moving from the central United States
to the East Coast wiped out spring-like temperatures and replaced them with
winter-time temperatures. On Jan. 30 at 1825 UTC (1:25 p.m. EST), NOAA's
GOES-13 satellite captured an image of clouds associated with the strong cold
front. The visible GOES-13 image shows a line of clouds that stretch from
Canada to the U.S. Gulf Coast and contain powerful thunderstorms with the
potential to be severe. Credit: NASA GOES Project
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